CaCoon Logic Model
**In development**
Program Objectives
Babies First!:
The Babies First! program is a relationship and strength-based public health nurse home visiting program that partners with families to improve pregnancy, family and child health outcomes, and to connect to quality health care and the community supports they deserve.
CaCoon:
See the CaCoon
Program Standards
CaCoon is a relationship and strength-based public health nurse home visiting program that partners with families with children and youth with disabilities or special health care needs by supporting them to access and coordinate quality health care and the community supports they deserve.
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Eligibility Criteria
Babies First!:
The Babies First! Program provides services to perinatal people, infants and children through four years of age, and parent or primary caregivers (also known as caregiver relatives but referred to as “caregivers" in this manual) of eligible children.
Local programs are encouraged to assess the needs in their community, as well as their program capacity, and target a specific population within the eligibility lists. Please inform a MCH Nurse Consultant of these plans.
CaCoon Criteria:
The Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) defines children and youth with special health care needs (CYSHCN) as “children who have or are at increased risk for chronic physical, developmental, behavioral, or emotional conditions. They also require health and related services of a type or amount beyond that required by children generally."
According to the MCHB
National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH), in our country:
- About 14 million children under 18 years old (19%) have a special healthcare need.
- 25% of homes had one or more children with a special healthcare need.
- CYSHCN are more likely to live in poverty, be non-Hispanic Black, and have public insurance than non-CYSHCN.
CaCoon program services are available to:
- Any child, birth through 20 years of age (up to their 21st birthday), who fits the above definition and has a diagnosis detailed in Targeted Case Management (TCM)
OAR 410-138-0040 “Diagnosis" column of
Table 2.
- A parent (primary caregiver) of an enrolled child or youth may also be enrolled in the CaCoon program (See 410-138-0020).
- Children and their families are seen without regard to economic status.
Local programs are encouraged to assess the needs in their community, as well as their program capacity, and target a specific population within the eligibility lists.
Roles
Administrator:
The public health administrator or program manager should
- Provide adequate resources to nurse supervisors to maintain minimum program standards (e.g., reflective supervision, case conferencing, team meetings, outreach/referral building).
- Know about funding sources used in the public health system to provide public health nursing services (e.g., Targeted Case Management, Administrative and Public Health Medicaid Match, modernization funds, Coordinate Care Organization funds).
- Advocate for provision of home visiting services in the community. Examples:
- Support the development of a community advisory board that addresses home visiting systems issues.
- Attend home visiting network/coordinating meetings.
- Support centralized referral networking.
Supervisor:
The Babies First! and CaCoon Supervisor has many duties. They may keep a small (1-2 family) caseload per 1 FTE dedicated to Supervision, as needed. The supervisor's main duties include:
- Provide clinical oversight and support of home visitors through case conferencing, chart reviews and joint visits:
- two hours of case conferencing per month (see Program Administration section below)
- four charts reviewed per home visitor per year (per privacy officer, peer chart review is acceptable for the purposes of quality assurance), and
- one observed home visit per home visitor per year
- Provide reflective supervision (RS) to each home visitor two hours per month per home visitor, one hour of which may be from group reflective supervision or peer reflective supervision.
- Lead at least monthly team meetings: ensure home visit staff are up to date on clinical and program guidelines, nursing, CHW and home visiting best practices.
- Maintain county-specific guidelines and protocols.
- Establish and support orientation of new staff, including understanding and support in work between CHW and PHNs, as applicable.
- Ensure professional development opportunities of team.
- Participate in RS training/professional development.
- Develop, maintain, update nursing documentation processes.
- Stay up to date on all program guidelines and ensure they are incorporated into nursing (and CHW practice as applicable).
- Outreach and referral development
- maintain positive relationships with home visiting and community system partners.
- visit referral partners at least every three months to present to partners.
- develop/ distribute marketing materials.
- participate in community partner meetings
- participate in community events (e.g., tabling at local fair)
- Review data and reports to support program continuous quality improvement and quality assurance.
- Meet monthly with designated State Nurse Consultant. These monthly phone calls will include updates, information sharing, and program support from the MCH Nurse Consultant*.
*For Supervisors working in both the Nurse-Family Partnership and Babies First! or CaCoon home visiting programs, contact a MCH Nurse Consultant for discussion of requirement.
Nurse:
The minimum required staffing for an implementing agency is at least a total FTE of 0.5 PHN. BSN prepared nurses are preferred but not required. If a local program is unable to meet the minimum staffing or caseload requirement, contact a Nurse Consultant for discussion.
Nurse home visitor job duties do not just include home visits: PHNs must prepare for visits, work on case management activities in between visits, document visits, commit to continuing education, attend community meetings, and participate in reflective supervision, case conferences and team meetings.
Community Health Worker:
A CHW is a frontline public health worker who is a trusted member of and/or has an unusually close understanding of the community served. The Babies First! and CaCoon Programs may include CHW staff whose role is to provide health education and case management services to meet the client goals according to the plan developed by the PHN. CHW productivity standards are the same as the PHN.
See Appendix D for guidelines on how CHWs and PHN work together, including the role of CHWs for interpretation services.
Support/Clerical Staff:
Support or clerical staff may work with PHN and CHW on a variety of program administrative tasks.
These include, but are not limited to:
- Scheduling client appointments
- Data entry (e.g., THEO data collection forms)
- Printing/packaging client materials
- Printing/packaging assessment and data collection materials for home visitors
- Review and follow up on required surveys
It is highly encouraged that implementing agencies allocate at least 0.2 support staff FTE per HV FTE for home visiting programs.
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Program Administration
Meetings
Case Conferencing:
Home visitors are asked to share a specific client situation that they would like to reflect upon. The team supports the home visitor in reflecting on what went well and what can be learned and applied in the future. The Gibbs Reflective Cycle is used to facilitate the conversation.
Best Practice: The Gibbs' reflective cycle is a process involving six steps:
Description - What happened?
Feelings - What did you think and feel about it?
Evaluation - What were the positives and negatives? How did you strengthen each HOPE domain?
Analysis - What sense can you make of it?
Conclusion - What else could you have done?
Action Plan - What will you do next time? It is a 'cycle' because the action you take in the final stage will feed back into the first stage, beginning the process again.
Reflective Supervision:
Each home visitor is required to receive two hours of reflective supervision per month (regardless of FTE).
See
Chapter 3 for details on reflective supervision.
See Appendix E for supporting material for reflective supervision sessions.
Team Meetings:
All Babies First! and CaCoon Programs are required to have monthly team meetings at a minimum (Triennial Review Tool item). Team meetings topics may cover administrative items, outreach/referral, nursing practice, professional development, manual/clinical guideline review, etc. Two hours per month of team meetings may be devoted to case conferencing, or case conferencing may be scheduled separately.
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Documentation
Also see,
Documentation Checklist in Appendix G.
Medical Record
Medical records must have the following documentation completed within two business days of a visit: Nursing Plan of Care or CHW visit documentation, as applicable.
The nursing plan of care must include the following information:
- Subjective data
- Objective data (specific data that must be included at a minimum is delineated in the Triennial Review Records Review Tool)
- Assessments (see Chapter 6 and the Triennial Review Records Review Tool)
- Nursing Diagnosis or Problem/Strengths Statement (Please see Figure 3 for examples of strength-based statements)
- Planned interventions
- Client outcomes (i.e., response to interventions)
- Evaluation
Figure 3. Examples of Strength Based Documentation (https://positiveexperience.org/)
Data Collection: THEO
THEO, short for Tracking Home Visiting Effectiveness in Oregon, is a comprehensive data system designed to gather and manage home visiting data for the Babies First! and CaCoon programs. The guidance manual for THEO can be found here. This manual was created to help you learn how to use the THEO data system. For questions or to give feedback, please contact THEO Application Support (see below). This initiative serves to monitor the effectiveness and outcomes of home visiting interventions in the state of Oregon. The data collection process involves various surveys, totaling six distinct forms:
-
Enrollment
-
Every Visit
-
Infant/Child
-
Child/Youth (CaCoon only)
-
Caregiver
-
Disenrollment
These forms are available in English and Spanish on the THEO website.
While these forms are referred to as "surveys," they are not to be read aloud to clients; instead, data should be extracted from interactions and therapeutic communication during home visits. The surveys cover a range of topics related to client demographics, participation, health history, and other relevant information. The system also has features to track appointments, monitor visit outcomes, and compile deidentified reports for analysis. Data accuracy and timely entry are encouraged, with regular data entry expected within 10 business days of each visit.
For questions or to give feedback, please contact THEO Application Support.